
Bloom Covered Treehouse with Bird
A cozy woodland hoop with a small treehouse tucked into leafy branches, clustered blossoms, warm bark, and a perched bird. The palette balances natural greens and browns with cheerful garden pinks, golds, and soft sky accents.
Polished DMC Color Palette
These DMC choices are selected to suit a bloom-covered treehouse design: warm bark and wood, shaded leaves, playful floral clusters, a small bird, and subtle background accents. Use the notes to decide where each shade works best.
Stitch Types by Design Area
Tree trunk & branches
Use stem stitch or split stitch for curved branch lines. Add short, irregular straight stitches in DMC 801 and 3826 over DMC 975 to suggest bark grain without filling the whole area heavily.
Treehouse walls & roof
Outline planks with 2 strands of DMC 801 or 3371, then fill with satin stitch or long-and-short stitches in DMC 975. Add one-strand highlight lines in DMC 3826 along upper edges.
Leaf clusters
Use lazy daisy, fly stitch, and tiny straight stitches. Alternate DMC 3052 and 3053 on visible leaves, then tuck DMC 935 into the back layers for depth.
Blossoms & buds
Make small flowers with lazy daisy petals or satin stitch petals in DMC 3722 and 818. Use French knots in DMC 742 or 744 for centers and scatter single knots as unopened buds.
Bird
Use short directional satin stitches for the body, following the curve of the chest and wing. Keep the eye and beak crisp with one strand of DMC 3371.
Thread Count & Handling
Facial details, bird eye, window shine, plank separations, fine leaf veins, and delicate outlines.
Most outlines, leaves, flowers, stems, treehouse edges, and general decorative elements.
Chunkier bark ridges, bold roof edge, heavy branch base, or foreground flower clusters when more texture is wanted.
Blending, Outlining & Shading Guidance
Texture Suggestions
Beginner-Friendly Practical Tips
Plan the hoop in zones
Complete trunk and treehouse details before adding nearby blossoms. This avoids catching flower knots while stitching the house.
Use a washable guide
Lightly mark major branch curves and the house outline. Small floral clusters can be stitched more freely without exact marks.
Control bulk on the back
Instead of carrying thread across the treehouse, end and restart. The window, bird, and flowers will look cleaner from the front.
Finish with accents
Save French knots, window shine, bird eye, and dark outlines for the end. These final details sharpen the whole piece.
Suggested Stitching Sequence
For the cleanest finish, work from structural and darker areas toward decorative highlights.





